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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: World
Oil
and Gas Production in the Next Decade
Oil
and Gas Production in the Next DecadeBy
Petroconsultants, Inc.
Forecasts for each of the world's 100 significant
producing nations, now in the final
stages of completion, indicate that
worldwide output of both crude
oil
and
natural gas will rise appreciably over the
period 1996-2005. Both onshore and offshore
sectors are evaluated using full-cycle
resource analysis and supply/demand balances
plus a wide variety of geological, economic,
political, and other criteria.
Oil
and
gas are separately assessed according to
their distinctive market and supply conditions.
Estimated import and export levels
for each producing country indicate future
global trade patterns.
World
oil
production, which has been recovering
since 1984, will move to new
record heights by 2005. These gains will
be led by the Middle East, whose incremental
production costs still lie far below most
other regions'. Africa and Latin America
will likewise surge to new record outputs,
and Eastern Europe will recover strongly
to finish third among the world's regions.
However, the principal consuming regions-
North America, Western Europe,
and the Far East/Australia-will all end
the period in serious, almost certainly permanent
decline. The world is thus facing a
profound and far-reaching shift in the supply
patterns of petroleum, one which will
deprive many major consuming nations of
control over much of their
oil
.
Global gas production, which, likewise, is
forecast to reach record levels by 2005, will
exhibit a more evenly distributed growth
pattern. Though Eastern Europe, whose
vast reserves dwarf other regions', will lead
the pack, every region will share strongly
in the growth, and no region will end the
period in long-term decline. Propelled
largely by environmental advantages, gas
usage will exceed
oil's
overall annual average
growth and gain market share at the
expense of both
oil
and coal. As with
oil
,
however, each of the three dominant market
zones for gas-North America, Europe,
and the Far East/Australia-will become
more dependent upon foreign supplies; for
demand will outstrip deliverability additions
within those regions.
Several areas will benefit from the world's
seemingly endless thirst for more hydrocarbons.
Among the emerging hot spots
for E&P activity in the next few years are
the following: the Caspian Sea, Timan-Pechora and
West
Siberian
Basins of Russia,
deepwater parts of the South Atlantic
rift-drift basins and Gulf of Mexico, North
Atlantic areas adjacent to and within the
North Sea,
West
Africa's Niger Delta
Basin
,
Tarim and Junggar Basins of China,
offshore Sakhalin, southern part of the
South China Sea, Northwest Shelf and
Timor Gap areas off Australia, and
Ghadames
Basin
of Algeria. When international
sanctions end, Libya, Iran, and Iraq
will also see major rejuvenation of activity.
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